T**********e 发帖数: 29576 | 1 The Atlantic
What Can We Learn from China's College Murders?
Liang Pan Apr 24 2013, 12:30 PM ET
On April 16, 2013, while the attention of the world and the U.S. media was
gripped by the Boston Marathon bombings, Chinese news outlets and social
media were captured by horrors of another kind: Huang Yang, a medical
science graduate student at Shanghai's prestigious Fudan University, was
poisoned to death, and the prime suspect is his roommate.
Bad news travels in pairs. Almost on the same day, one undergraduate at
Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics was killed by his
roommate, and in a dorm room of Nanchang Hangkong University, a decayed
corpse was found hidden.
These heinous crimes revived collective memories of the bygone tragedies on
Chinese university campuses. In 1994, Zhu Ling, a highly-accomplished
sophomore majoring in physical chemistry at Tsinghua University, was
poisoned with thallium, a highly toxic substance. Thanks to diagnoses made
through the nascent Internet, the antidote was delivered in time to keep Zhu
alive, but her life was destroyed by permanent paralysis and amentia. Zhu's
roommate was the only named suspect in the case, but despite a 19-year long
investigation, this case still remains unresolved and has gone cold .
Thallium poisoning cases happened again in 1997 and 2007 in Peking
University and China University of Mining and Technology, and the victims
and the perpetrators were also classmates living under the same roof.
http://www.theatlantic.com/china/archive/2013/04/what-can-we-le | T**********e 发帖数: 29576 | 2 ---------in a dorm room of Nanchang Hangkong University, a decayed
corpse was found hidden.
what case is that? |
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